Nitrogen gas is stable. However there are nitrogen compounds that are reactive.
Nitrogen will react chemically, but it is not "highly reactive."
Sulfur itself is a non-reactive element... although sulfuric acid is highly reactive.
No, oxygen is the more reactive element!
Chlorine is a highly reactive element
Halogens have highreactivity.
Phosphours
Sulfur itself is a non-reactive element... although sulfuric acid is highly reactive.
Nitrogen is reactive. But not very reactive because of the amount of electrons it has.
Cerium is reactive but not highly reactive.
no it is not reactive
Chemical nitrogen 1 it is pure as it does not have any inert gases. 2 it is lighter compared to atmospheric nitrogen. 3 it is highly reactive. Atmospheric nitrogen 1 it has 1% inert gases. 2 it is heavier than chemical nitrogen due to the dust particles. 3 it is less reactive because of the inert gases.
Nitrogen is reactive because it does not have 8 valence electrons.
Magnesium is highly reactive and will react with many things. It will react with elements of the Nitrogen group, the Oxygen group and the halogens. It will also react with acids, water etc.
the highly reactive metal is potassium
Sodium chloride is not highly reactive.
Potassium is highly reactive, even explosive in some circumstances.
Tin is highly reactive.
Usually the term "inert" is applied to gas constituents of air which are not highly reactive, such as nitrogen or argon, and other gases, if considered separate from the oxygen we need for respiration and important to our body's gas exchange. Since the highly reactive oxygen is only about 21% of the air we breathe, the inert components make up the bulk of the remainder: nitrogen being about 78%, about 1% argon (as a noble gas, also highly unreactive), and much smaller amounts of carbon dioxide and other gases such as helium, methane, krypton, neon, and molecular hydrogen.